English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

OK
I've got a new stereo that tells me it can read MP3 files and that if you have the right gear you can get 999 tracks on 1 CD by creating directories and that the CD should be ISO 9660 level 1 or level 2 or Joliet.
Does anyone know where I can get the software for this facility and is a normal CD-RW compatible

2006-07-15 21:04:31 · 3 answers · asked by projetkarma 2 in Consumer Electronics Music & Music Players

To T2THJ you are wrong, there is a method in which you can do this. My Daughter had a CD made for her and she's got 450 songs on one CD, but has lost touch with the person who mmade it for her!!

2006-07-15 22:16:31 · update #1

3 answers

convert ur files 2 MP3 Prom, u can use Musicmatch Jukebox, this conversion will decrease da file size without altering the quality, So i guess u can then write some 999 files in 1 700mb cd.

2006-07-15 21:13:51 · answer #1 · answered by Invader 2 · 3 0

If you already have the mp3 files stored on your PC, then any CD-writing software (including that built into Windows XP) will be able to burn the files to CD.

ISO 9660 level 1 or level 2 or Joliet is the normal format for CD-R / CD-RW

Check that the new stereo can read CD-RW before you waste a disc on it. It may only be able to read CD-R.

If you don't already have mp3 files, you can create them from CD (known as ripping) using software such as Musicmatch Jukebox or Windows Media Player.

2006-07-16 11:07:00 · answer #2 · answered by Neil 7 · 0 0

That's not true depending on the size of the audio files but if you want high quality in the songs you only be able to put approxiamently 20/21 MAX songs on one burnable disk. But that stereo means it that it'll play MP3 audio files once it's burned to a Burnable Audio CD.

2006-07-16 04:44:43 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers